Lagos - Last
year on June 3rd 2012, there was a plane crash in Nigeria in which over
163 people were killed. The plane was owned by Dana Air. The day before
that on June 2nd 2012 a Nigerian cargo plane owned by Kabo Air left our
shores and flew to Accra, Ghana where it overshot the runway, crashed
into the main road behind the airport and killed many Ghanaian
motorists.
Before
the first crash took place last year and between the two major crashes
there were numerous other smaller ones involving light aircraft, private
jets, military planes and helicopters that were not publicised. All
these unfortunate events occurred under the tenure of Princess Stella
Oduah, who is the current Minister of Aviation. Under her watch close to
200 souls have been killed in air crashes in the last two years alone.
This does not surprise me given the nature of the individual that is
involved.
What
does surprise me however is the fact that just one day after those that
perished in the latest crash were killed, before the victims were
buried, before the site of the crash was cleared, whilst the charred
bodies and burnt parts of the victims still lay at the crash site and
before any formal investigation into the causes of the crash have
commenced, the ruling PDP, through their spokesman Chief Olisa Metuh,
has told the world that they have ”full confidence” in Stella Oduah and
that ”she should be allowed to continue her good work”. Is there any
greater evidence of the fact that the PDP is a sick party that is led by
sick people than this? Such insensitivity is rarely seen anywhere in
the world. Only in Nigeria can this happen.
Not
only am I surprised but I am also utterly disgusted. How many more
people have to be killed in air crashes before our President realises
that he needs a new Minister of Aviation? The truth is that there is far
more to aviation than beautifying airports.
The
first and most important consideration has to be the safety of the
passengers and the airworthiness of the planes followed by a solemn and
avowed commitment to ensure the discipline, professionalism and
efficiency of the aviation parastatals. Most important of all when a
plane crashes, whatever the reasons or causes, the Minister ought to
assume full responsibility and even offer his or her resignation.
Failing that he or she ought to be redeployed to another ministry or
completely removed from the cabinet.
This
is because it is his or her primary responsibility to keep air
travellers safe and alive. CRAsHED: Fuselage of the crashed aircraft
Embraer 120RT Brasilia, registration number 5N-BJY. CRAsHED: Fuselage of
the crashed aircraft Embraer 120RT Brasilia, registration number
5N-BJY.
Sadly
it does not appear that this is likely to happen anytime soon. As a
matter of fact I am convinced that even if 1,000 people were killed in
air crashes in the space of just 6 months under President Goodluck
Jonathan he would still not redeploy or sack Stella Oduah because our
President just ”doesn’t give a damn”. Each time a plane crashes it
saddens me deeply because to anyone that has ever worked there before
aviation is like a family. Worse still those people that lost their
lives were our people – they were our fellow Nigerians.
It
really does hurt. Suffice it to say that there were no air crashes
under my watch and not one drop of blood was split from the air whilst I
was Minister of Aviation, whether it be passenger plane, private jet,
helicopter or light aircraft. I thank God for that because if it had
happened I would not have been able to sleep at night.
I
am the only Minister of Aviation in Nigeria between 2002 to date that
can lay claim to that. I put it down to hard work, prayer and the grace
of God and nothing else. Unlike some others, I was literally paranoid
when it came to air safety and security because it was obvious to me
that there was more to the whole thing than meets the eye. Permit me to
go into a little detail. The year before I became Minister of Aviation
there were 5 plane crashes and 453 people perished from our skies.
The
airlines that crashed were Bellview (2005), Sosolisso (2006), a
Nigerian military plane carrying a large number of senior army officers
(2006), ADC (2006) and a private light aircraft in Kano which had on
board the adopted son of the PDP National Chairman Ahmadu Ali and a
pilot (2006). At the time that all these crashes took place Professor
Babalola Borisade was the Minister of Aviation.
In
November 2006 Borisade was redeployed to the Ministry of Culture and
Tourism where I was Minister and I was sent to Aviation and by the grace
of God from that point on my team and I, with the full backing and
support of President Olusegun Obasanjo, put a stop to the crashes and we
broke the cycle. We left office in May 2007 and almost immediately
after that the standard dropped again and the cycle of terrible air
crashes returned to our shores.
They
have not stopped since. As I pointed out in another essay which I wrote
last year after the Dana crash, 90 per cent of the crashes that have
taken place in Nigeria in the last 11 years have taken place at
weekends. That in itself is strange but what is even stranger is the
fact that there are two ten year cycles of major crashes that have been
in operation in our country since 1992. I call them ”sacrificial
cycles”. The details are as follows.
There
was a major crash in 1992 (C-130 military airplane in which 160 army
officers were killed). Ten years later there was a second major crash in
2002 (EAS Airline in which 105 people were killed). Ten years later
there was a third major crash in 2012 (Dana Airline in which 163 were
killed). This represents the first ”ten year cycle” of crashes and if it
is not broken there will be another major crash in 2022 which will
result in a large loss of life.
The
second ”ten year cycle” began in 1996 when ADC crashed with the loss of
over 160 lives. This was followed by another crash ten years later in
2006 which involved another plane from ADC and which again resulted in
the loss of over 160 lives. If the cycle is not broken I have little
doubt that there will be another major crash in Nigeria in 2016.
These
observations have nothing to do with superstition but they are based on
painstaking research, facts and logic. There have many other big and
small crashes within and between the dates of the two major ”ten year
cycles” but what seems amazing and strange to me is the recurrent and
definative pattern of the ten year cycles themselves.
It
is almost as if it is some kind of pagan or religious obligation or
debt that is being paid to some hidden and dark forces. Some may dismiss
all this as mere coincidence but the actual day and month that all
those crashes took place on tells another story which I will not go into
here. Whatever anyone else may believe or think I have no doubt
whatsoever in my mind that there is a spiritual dimension to these
matters and I have been saying so publicly since I was at the aviation
ministry.
Other
than sheer hard work, an insistence on full compliance with safety
standards and the display of the most rigorous form of discipline from
the top to the bottom, in order to break these patterns and cycles of
crashes and protect our skies, much prayer and intercession is required.
There
are a number of other rather startling and strange patterns, as well,
but I am not prepared to share those with the public in order not to
create any panic. One thing that I know, though, is that God is in
control and that, as the bible says, ”He reveals to redeem”. There is
absolutely no cause for any fear or alarm.
I
have written and spoken many times on this. I have pointed out the
problems over and over again and suggested how it can be stopped. It may
not stop though because there are some depraved people in our country
that do not want it to stop, that benefit from it, that delight in it
and that believe in it. This is the bitter truth.
That,
together with the fact that in Nigeria not enough people care for or
truly value human life. We only pretend to care. For more on this, I
urge those that are interested to read my essay titled ”Air Crashes In
Nigeria, Sacrificial Cycles and the Weekend Phenomenon” which was
published in a number of newspapers after the Dana crash last year. They
can also read the first segment of my submissions at a public hearing
of the Senate Aviation Committee in 2008 which was titled ”My Mandate At
The Ministry of Aviation”. They are both on my website… or they can
just be googled.
My
views about the crashes and their causes are well enunciated in both.
Other than that I will not say anything about air crashes in Nigeria
because what I have said and exposed has already caused me more than
enough trouble from those that believe such matters ought to be kept
secret and away from the public for reasons best known to themselves.
Suffice
it to say that my conscience is clear and that I did my very best to
save and protect Nigerian lives whilst I was Minister of Aviation. That
is all that matters to me and because of that I sleep very well at
night. To God alone be the glory.
One
last point. I find it nauseating and distasteful that some people would
relish the fact that the corpse of Governor Agagu went through all that
it did when he was being flown to Akure for his final burial rites and
that they seemed almost joyful at the fact that the plane crashed
resulting in the loss of all those innocent souls.
This
is a disgrace and I feel utterly outraged by it. The shameful refrain,
which is all over the social media, is that Agagu somehow deserved to
die a ”second death” from the skies because so many people had
supposedly been killed in plane crashes under his watch as Minister of
Aviation. This is false. It is also sheer wickedness.
As
a matter of fact it is evil. File photo: a scene of plane crash File
photo: Dana plane crash Only God knows how each of us will come to our
end and it is not true to say that the harvest of deaths that took place
in the aviation industry whilst President Obasanjo was in power took
place under Agagu’s watch. He was appointed Minister of Aviation in 1999
and remained there until 2001 when he was redeployed to the Ministry of
Power by the President.
I
am not aware of ANY plane crashes that took place during Agagu’s tenure
as Minister of Aviation. The string of consistent major crashes in
Nigeria really began in 2002 when EAS Airline crashed in Kano killing
over 105 people including the then Minister of Sports, Mr. Mark Aku.
At
the time of that crash Mrs. Kema Chikwe was Minister of Aviation and
not Agagu. The last major crash that took place before the 2002 EAS
crash in Nigeria was the aforementioned ADC crash of 1996 where 160 were
killed. The most pronounced years of tragedy and carnage in aviation,
which involved 6 major crashes and numerous smaller ones, were really
between 2002 and November 2006 when the carnage was finally brought to a
halt. Sadly it began again almost immediately after we left office in
May 2007 when small planes, light aircraft and helicopters started
dropping from the sky.
Then
came the mysterious disappearance of Ibori’s ”Wings Aviation” plane
with a number of fatal casualties from our skies in 2008 and things
really went downhill from there. In the last 11 years, between 2002 and
2013 over 850 people have been killed in air crashes in Nigeria- 453
under Borisade and just under 200 of them under Stella Oduah.
This
is an atrocious record of air safety and I believe that I am right in
saying that it is a peace-time world record. Whatever the case it is
nothing to be proud of and it reflects badly on all of us, particularly
those of us that were once Ministers of Aviation. I have done my
research and I have the details of every single crash that has taken
place in this country over the last eleven years whether it be a private
plane, light aircraft, military aircraft, passenger plane or
helicopter. As long as such a crash resulted in the loss of life I have
the record of it and all the details.
None
of those crashes took place under the watch of Dr. Segun Agagu and I
implore those that are doing so to stop attributing the sad events that
preceeded his burial to some kind of divine retribution for what
purportedly occured when he was Minister of Aviation.
Nothing
can be more cruel than this and nothing could be further from the
truth. Permit me to end this contribution with a few words to the
families of those that were lost in the crash. It is always a painful
thing when we lose someone dear and this is especially so when it
happens in such a painful and violent manner.
My
heart goes out to each and every family that lost their loved ones in
this latest crash. May the Lord comfort each and every one of them and
may He heal their wounds with the balm of Gilead. My commiserations also
goes to the people of Ondo State and particularly to my dear friend and
brother Governor Olusegun Mimiko who is a man that I have tremendous
respect for, a practising and committed christian and a man of immense
integrity and spiritual fortitude.
To
my dear brothers that were lost in that terrible crash themselves,
including Mr. Tunji Okunsanya and his son Tunji jnr. (whose MIC company
buried both of my parents in 1995 and 2001 respectively), Mr. Deji Falae
who was the Commissioner of Culture and Tourism for Ondo state and so
many others, I say the following- may God have mercy upon you. May He
forgive you of all your sins. May He cause His face to shine upon you.
May He grant you peace eternal. May you abide with Him in eternity. May
your souls be blessed forever.
May
the watchman and the boatman grant you safe passage into the higher
realms. May the halls of Valhalla, where the brave shall live forever,
be open unto to you.
May
you never be forgotten and may your names wax strong in our hearts and
minds from generation to generation. May the memory of your beautiful
smiles continue to give us strength and bring us hope. You were a real
blessing to so many. Rest in peace. Until we meet again.
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